Archipelagic Juxtapositions

Cold War

Cold War Studies often finds itself mainly within the fields of Political Science, International Relations and History. In addition, conventional narratives of the Cold War and its historiographies is often associated with western contexts, positioned with having emanated from Europe and subsequently spilled into the Third World and Asia, at the initiatives of global superpowers then, namely the United States of America, and the then-Soviet Union. Against such a dominant narrative, a response within Southeast Asia was a refocus on the Asian-African Conference in 1955, which saw national leaders from many former colonial territories gathering in Bandung, Indonesia. Through international solidarities, these leaders attempted to seek a political third way, rather than choose between the ongoing polarised and binary ideologies of the ‘free world’ versus ‘communism’.

This section hopes to further collate recent works of scholars outside fields of Political Science, International Relations and History (but not necessarily excluding them) and working in/on Southeast Asia who have sought to give greater attention to local Southeast Asian contexts. Some such examples include how in Tuong Vu and Wongsurawat’s work, various Southeast Asian actors perceived of themselves, friends and enemies, which reflected their religious, racial and gender beliefs and attitudes; how cultural resources such as the arts and media were deployed, or how even with limited political and economic capabilities, these actors were neither puppets nor victims of US and the Soviet, but were also actively negotiating loyalties.

This section also hopes to bring together creative works that help to elucidate practices and experiences from the ground-up which complicate and contest ideological binaries and politics of Cold War. This could include how artists, musicians, intellectuals and other cultural actors worked outside of, or sought to negotiate the binary and polarising ideologies of the Cold War on a global front, and at the same time, were sensitive to their local contexts. Some other creative works also continue to explore legacies of Cold War in various forms in present-day Southeast Asia through comparative continuities beyond nation-state boundaries, explore geographies and ecologies traumatised and reshaped by bombs, landmines and chemical agents, to how families dealt with deaths and ghosts and remembering this aspect of their family history.

Author/ArtistName of workYear/
Edition
Publisher/JournalMediumFor more information
Florence MokDisseminating and Containing Communist Propaganda to Overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia through Hong Kong, the Cold War Pivot, 1949–19602021
The Historical Journal,
Volume 65 , Issue 5,
pp. 1397 – 1417
Article Link
Poon Ka-Yan EricaSoutheast Asian Film Festival: The site of the Cold War cultural struggle2019Journal of Chinese Cinemas
Volume 13, Issue 1, pp. 76-92
Article Link
Sim Chi YinOne Day We’ll Understand2015-
ongoing
ArtworkInformation on this research-based artwork and installation views can be found on the artist’s website here: Link

An interview/conversation between Sim Chi Yin and Prof Tejaswini Niranjana (23:05mins) can be viewed here: Link
Tada HengsapkulYou lead me down, to the ocean2018Artwork Link
Vandy RattanaBomb Ponds2009ArtworkInformation on (cancelled) exhibition on Bomb ponds by Sàn art: Link

Artist’s website: Link

Video: Link
Ang Cheng GuanSoutheast Asia’s Cold War: An Interpretive History2018University of Hawaii PressBook Link
Heonik Kwon After the massacre : commemoration and consolation in Ha My and My Lai2006University of California PressBook Link
Hue Tam Ho-TaiRadicalism and the Origins of the Vietnamese Revolution1996Harvard University PressBook Link
Jeremy E. Taylor, Xu LanjunChineseness and the Cold War
Contested Cultures and Diaspora in Southeast Asia and Hong Kong
2022RoutledgeBook Link
Jini Kim WatsonCold War Reckonings: Authoritarianism and the Genres of Decolonization2022Fordham University PressBook Link
Kung Chien-WenDiasporic Cold Warriors: Nationalist China, Anticommunism, and the Philippine Chinese, 1930s-1970s2022Cornell University PressBook Link
Midori Yamamura and Yu-Chieh LiVisual Representations of the Cold War and Postcolonial Struggles : Art in East and Southeast Asia2021RoutledgeBook Link
Sangjoon LeeCinema and the Cultural Cold War : US Diplomacy and the Origins of the Asian Cinema Network2020Cornell University PressBook Link
Stephen H Whiteman, Sarena Abdullah, Yvonne Low, Phoebe ScottAmbitious Alignments: New Histories of Southeast Asian Art, 1945-19902018National Gallery SingaporeBook Link
Thy PhuWarring Visions: Photography and Vietnam2022Duke University PressBook Link
Tony Day and Maya H.T. LiemCultures at War: The Cold War and Cultural Expression in Southeast Asia2010Cornell University PressBook Link
Tuong Vu and Wasana WongsurawatDynamics of the Cold War in Asia
Ideology, Identity, and Culture
2009Palgrave MacmillanBook Link
Y-Dang TroeungRefugee Lifeworlds: The Afterlife of the Cold War in Cambodia2022Temple University PressBook Link
Zhou TaomoMigration in the Time of Revolution: China, Indonesia, and Cold War2019Cornell University PressBook Link
Kathleen Ditzig, Carlos Quijon Jr (curators);
list of participating artists can be found on respective exhibitions on the website provided.
Afro-Southeast Asia: Asian Affinities during a Cold War (research & exhibition series)Jan 2021-
Oct 2022
Exhibition Link
Amir Muhammad (director)Apa Khabar Orang Kampung (Village People Radio Show)2007Da Huang Pictures
(production house)
Film Link
Tan Pin Pin (director)To Singapore, with love2013Film Link
Ben Tran Air-conditioned Socialism: The Atmospheres of War and Globalization in Lê Minh Khuê’s Fiction2019Cultural Critique, Number 105,
pp. 106-134
Journal article/issue Link
Jafar Suryomenggolo
(editor for this issue)
Rereading Leftist Writings from Southeast Asia2018Southeast Asian studies, Vol.7, Issue 1, pp. 3-11Journal article/issue Link
Patricio N. AbinalesCan Communists Laugh? Recalling Vanishing Leftist Ditties of the Marcos Era2015Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints
Vol. 63, Issue 1, pp. 131-152
Journal article/issue Link
Mohamed Latiff MohamedConfrontation (translated by Shaffiq Selamat)2013Epigram BooksNovel/Graphic novel Link
Sonny LiewThe Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye2015Epigram BooksNovel/Graphic novel Link
Bani Hykal (SG)Residencies Studio Sessions Performance (NTUCCA)- history and affect of the cultural cold war through the movement of Jazz music2014Performance art/lecture Link

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